A pronoun takes the place of a noun or nouns in a sentence. Example sentence:
John is my brother, he is a year older than me.
The pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'John' is the second half of the sentence.
Fran and Frank have two children, they have a boy and a girl.
The pronoun 'they' takes the place of the nouns 'Fran and Frank' in the second half of the sentence.
No, a verb indicates the action in a sentence.
Usually the preposition serves this function.
The pronoun which is a relative pronoun that introduces the relative clause 'which sometimes stalls'.A relative clause relates information about its antecedent, 'truck'.The pronoun 'which' takes the place of the noun 'truck'.The other pronoun in the sentence is our, a possessive adjective, a word that takes the place of a possessive noun.The possessive adjective 'our' describes the noun 'neighbor' as of the speaker and one or more other people.
Besides subject of a sentence, a subject pronoun can function as the subject of a relative clause. A relative clause is a group of words with a subject and a verb but is not a complete sentence. A relative clause 'relates' information about its antecedent.Examples: Mother loves to bake.subject of the sentence: She made cookies for the children.subject of the relative clause: The cookies that shemade are for the children.
other can be used as a pronoun or an adjective in the sentence above other is being used as a pronoun As an adjective: "the other day" where other is used to describe the noun day
"The" is an article (a determiner), a word that introduces a noun or pronoun that helps to determine something about that noun or pronoun. The article "the" is called a "definite article" because it tells you that the noun or pronoun is a specific person or thing. The other articles are 'a' and 'an' are called "indefinite articles: which tell you that the person or thing is any one.
The possessive pronouns (mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs) change their form to become adjectives (my, our, your, his, her, its). A possessive pronoun takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something. An adjective pronoun that describes a noun belonging to someone or something. Examples:Possessive pronoun: Gloria lost her math book, this book must be hers.Adjective pronoun: Gloria lost her math book, this must be her book.
This is almost the sole function of a preposition, but the description also applies to some other sentence elements such as transitive verbs, gerunds, participles, and some infinitives that can be single words.
Me is a pronoun.
The pronoun which is a relative pronoun that introduces the relative clause 'which sometimes stalls'.A relative clause relates information about its antecedent, 'truck'.The pronoun 'which' takes the place of the noun 'truck'.The other pronoun in the sentence is our, a possessive adjective, a word that takes the place of a possessive noun.The possessive adjective 'our' describes the noun 'neighbor' as of the speaker and one or more other people.
Besides subject of a sentence, a subject pronoun can function as the subject of a relative clause. A relative clause is a group of words with a subject and a verb but is not a complete sentence. A relative clause 'relates' information about its antecedent.Examples: Mother loves to bake.subject of the sentence: She made cookies for the children.subject of the relative clause: The cookies that shemade are for the children.
The only pronoun that is always capitalized is the personal pronoun 'I'.All other pronouns are capitalized only when they are the first word in a sentence.
The correct pronoun to complete the sentence is me.The objective pronoun 'me' will complete the compound object of the preposition 'for you and me'.Other options to complete the prepositional phrase are 'for you and her' and for you and him. The pronouns 'her' and 'him' are also objective pronouns.
The pronoun "I" is always capitalized. All other pronouns are capitalized only when the first word in a sentence.
In the sentence given, or any other sentence I can imagine, "we" is a pronoun unless it is enclosed in quotation marks as in the previous line. ("We" may be a pronoun even if included within a quotation, but any single word enclosed in quotation marks is usually functioning as a noun in a sentence in which it appears.)
other can be used as a pronoun or an adjective in the sentence above other is being used as a pronoun As an adjective: "the other day" where other is used to describe the noun day
The noun, pronoun, or other noun form is called the object of the preposition. It is the word that the preposition relates to other words in the sentence, either as an adjective or an adverb phrase. There are commonly articles (a, an, the) or adjectives used with the object (e.g. in the large box).
"The" is an article (a determiner), a word that introduces a noun or pronoun that helps to determine something about that noun or pronoun. The article "the" is called a "definite article" because it tells you that the noun or pronoun is a specific person or thing. The other articles are 'a' and 'an' are called "indefinite articles: which tell you that the person or thing is any one.
The pronoun in the example sentence is us.The pronoun 'us' is a personal pronoun that takes the place of a noun (nouns or pronoun) for the speaker and one or more other people as the object of a verb (indirect object of the verb 'showed') or a preposition.